• Bible Studies

    Jeremiah 26-29

    We are continuing with the “flashback” device this morning. Remember we reached something of a climax/confrontation between Zedekiah and Jeremiah in Chapter 21 and then the scene suddenly shifts to a series of confrontations with previous kings. It is a way of showing that this is a pattern of Jeremiah’s relationships with all the kings since Josiah and a history of God’s attempts to shake the people into obedience. Nothing is working and, as we know, nothing is going to work. They are too far gone. Jeremiah has moved from being a thorn in the side of the king to being a traitor. He has called on the people to…

  • Fred's Blog

    Step right up…

    While in Portland for the latest Q conference in April I had a few minutes with one of the participants who has also been a speaker at many Christian conferences around the country. We had not seen each other in a couple of years and I wanted to catch up – and hoped he did as well. As we talked he made a funny comment about being one of the “carnies” that move around from show to show on the circuit. While they all travel separately (unlike the circus) they all seem to end up at the same conferences together. Carnies call it running a “joint” (a booth), a “grab…

  • Fred's Blog

    Who Gets The Money…?

    I don’t make many statements or give quotes but sometimes I do when I think the issue is interesting and my perspective will help. That was the case in an article by Christine Scheller  titled “Who Gets The Money?”. The premise is Christian donors are less likely to write checks to minority-run ministries and there is possibly a race-based disparity. A minority ministry leader, Leroy Barber from Mission Year, wrote a response: “I was incredibly saddened earlier this week as I read an article by Christine A. Scheller titled “Who Gets The Money?” on urbanfaith.com. Although I have lived with this reality swirling around me for over twenty years in ministry…

  • Fred's Blog

    The Next Chapter for Leadership Foundations

    I spent an hour on the phone this morning with Dave Hillis the relatively new President of Leadership Foundations. I was first introduced to LF many years ago through Reid Carpenter – a genuine cowboy and former Young Life leader.  As everyone says semi-seriously “If you were in Urban Young Life you moved to Leadership Foundations when you got older.  If you were in regular Young Life you moved to the Fellowship.” There is probably a good deal of truth in that.  Anyway, for years the Leadership Foundations were local city initiatives with a wide variety of missions that often started with hosting prayer breakfasts and working with city leadership, pastors…

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  • Fred's Blog

    Vacations With A Purpose

    Greg Murtha and his wife Tracey were in Tyler on Saturday picking up their nine year old son Jackson from his week at Pine Cove camp. They drove over from Nashville where Greg heads up Half-Time. Bob Buford and I were working together years ago when he wrote “Half-Time”. It was a great success and the response created the opportunity to form an organization to work with all the men and women who were working their way through the “success to significance” transition.  That’s been quite a while ago and Greg has done an extraordinary job of growing it from a concept to an organization. I had lost touch with what…

  • Fred's Blog

    Social Entrepreneurs

    One of my treasures is a framed picture of Peter Drucker, Bob Buford, Tom Luce and myself outside Peter’s house in Estes Park in the early 1990s. Underneath it Bob wrote, “The Beginning of the Social Entrepreneur Network.”  It was an idea we had been working on for several years and one that was close to Peter’s heart as it combined two of his basic concepts – the value of the entrepreneur as a creative force and the social responsibility that entailed.  I’ve been thinking about this recently because like the word philanthropy the phrase “social entrepreneur” has morphed over the years. When we began thinking about it we meant…

  • Bible Studies

    Jeremiah 1

    This morning we start the book of Jeremiah and will be in the book for several weeks. Since no prophet ever lived in a vacuum, let’s look first at the context of Jeremiah’s life and ministry. The tectonic plates of three empires – Egypt, Assyria and Babylonia – were moving and pushing against each other with Israel, as usual, in the middle. It was a time of instability, changes, uncertainty, shifting power, volatility, movement of people across borders, leadership turnover, and threats (real and imagined). In other words, Jeremiah stepped into a world just like ours today. With Assyria declining after 200+ years of dominance, Babylonia on the rise and…

  • Fred's Blog

    Bound Together

    This is the first entry on a new blog for The Gathering so I’ve given some thought to what we want to do that is unique to us. I remember a particular experience from several years ago. Carol and I spent time in San Francisco and took a day to hike around the John Muir Woods. We were fortunate to have picked a morning when very few people were there and with no lines or noise. If you’ve been in the redwood forest you’ll know it is like entering Notre Dame or another of the great European churches. The people are reverent in their respect for these living giants of…

  • Bible Studies

    The Widow’s Oil

    1The wife of a man from the company of the prophets cried out to Elisha, “Your servant my husband is dead, and you know that he revered the Lord. But now his creditor is coming to take my two boys as his slaves.” 2Elisha replied to her, “How can I help you? Tell me, what do you have in your house?” “Your servant has nothing there at all,” she said, “except a little oil.” 3Elisha said, “Go around and ask all your neighbors for empty jars. Don’t ask for just a few. 4Then go inside and shut the door behind you and your sons. Pour oil into all the jars,…

  • Bible Studies

    Colossians 3:18-4:18

    This morning we finish our study of Colossians.  We could spend an entire class on each of the two areas we are going to study so it will feel a little like skipping a rock on a pond.  Fortunately, we have covered some of the material before in Ephesians. Three relationships:  husbands and wives/children/slaves Paul, as far as we know, was not married. However, he probably had looked around at the marriages he had observed and saw some principles. The Bible does not idealize marriage. There are good marriages and there are not so good marriages and Scripture does not attempt to hide this. Paul probably didn’t derive these principles…